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    THEATRE + COMEDY

    Crimes of the Heart

    Presented by Baytown Little Theater at Baytown Little Theater

    February 11-February 27, 2011

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    Crimes of the Heart

    Baytown Little Theater presents Crimes of the Heart, written by Beth Henley, and directed by Amy Miller-Martin and Sam Estrada.

    The scene is Hazlehurst, Mississippi, where the three Magrath sisters have gathered to await news of the family patriarch, their grandfather, who is living out his last hours in the local hospital. Lenny, the oldest sister, is unmarried at thirty and facing diminishing marital...

    Baytown Little Theater presents Crimes of the Heart, written by Beth Henley, and directed by Amy Miller-Martin and Sam Estrada.

    The scene is Hazlehurst, Mississippi, where the three Magrath sisters have gathered to await news of the family patriarch, their grandfather, who is living out his last hours in the local hospital. Lenny, the oldest sister, is unmarried at thirty and facing diminishing marital prospects; Meg, the middle sister, who quickly outgrew Hazlehurst, is back after a failed singing career on the West Coast; while Babe, the youngest, is out on bail after having shot her husband in the stomach.

    Their troubles, grave and yet, somehow, hilarious, are highlighted by their priggish cousin, Chick, and by the awkward young lawyer who tries to keep Babe out of jail while helpless not to fall in love with her.

    In the end the play is the story of how its young characters escape the past to seize the future—but the telling is so true and touching and consistently hilarious that it will linger in the mind long after the curtain has descended.

    Beth Henley completed Crimes of the Heart, her tragic comedy about three sisters surviving crisis after crisis in a small Mississippi town, in 1978. She submitted it to several regional theatres for consideration without success. Unknown to her, however, a friend had entered it in the well-known Great American Play Contest of the Actors' Theatre of Louisville. The play was chosen as co-winner for 1977-78 and performed in February, 1979, at the company's annual festival of New American Plays. The production was extremely well-received, and the play was picked up by numerous regional theatres for their 1979-81 seasons.

    At the end of 1980, Crimes of the Heart was produced off-Broadway at the Manhattan Theatre Club for a limited, sold-out, engagement of thirty-two performances. By the time the play transferred to Broadway in November, 1981, Crimes of the Heart had received the prestigious Pulitzer Prize.

    Henley was the first woman to win the Pulitzer for Drama in twenty-three years, and her play was the first ever to win before opening on Broadway. Crimes of the Heart went on to garner the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best New American Play, a Gugenheim Award, and a Tony nomination. The tremendously successful Broadway production ran for 535 performances, spawning regional productions in London, Chicago, Washington, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Dallas, and Houston. The success of the play—and especially the prestige of the Pulitzer award—assured Henley's place among the elite of the American theatre for years to come. As Henley herself put it, with typically wry humor, ' 'winning the Pulitzer Prize means I'll never have to work in a dog-food factory again" (Haller 44).

    Often compared to the work of other "Southern Gothic'' writers like Eudora Welty and Flannery O'Connor, Henley's play is widely appreciated for its compassionate look at good country people whose lives have gone wrong. Henley explores the pain of life by piling up tragedies on her characters in a manner some critics have found excessive, but she does so with a dark and penetrating sense of humor which audiences—as the play's success has demonstrated—found to be a fresh perspective in the American theatre.

    Rating- MA 14 (content, language).


    Baytown Little Theater

    4328 Hugh Echols Blvd.
    Baytown, TX 77521

    Full map and directions

    Tickets:

    All other tickets $15.

    Tickets can be purchased on line at www.baytown.littletheater.org. Group purchases of 8 or more can be made by calling 281-424-7617 and leaving a message.


    Times:

    Friday-Saturday at 8:00 PM, and Sunday matinees at 2:30 PM


    Phone: 281-424-7617

    Parking: On site parking available.

    Accessibility Info: Currently, no accessibility information is available for this event.

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